RMDRDM46–The Font, Cathedral Church, Bury St Edmunds
RMDPATTJ–BURY V DERBY FA CUP 1903
RMDRDM41–St Mary's Church, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk
RMER5DNG–Bungalows - Holywell Row, Bury Saint Edmunds, Suffolk
RM2RGCHG7–Abbey Gate, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk
RM2M9C3KJ–Soldiers Memorial, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk
RMKRD1B2–Wedding of Viscount Bury and Myee Carrington
RMKRD1A8–Wedding of Viscount Bury and Myee Carrington
RMDRF084–Oliver R. H.Bury, Vanity Fair, Spy
RMER5GC8–Charabanc Outing, Ramsbottom, Bury, near Greenmount, Lancashire, England. 1910s
RMER5GC9–Pioneer Mills, Radcliffe, Manchester, near Bury, Lancashire, England. 1915
RMTWB29N–WW1 - Incendiary dropped in Zeppelin raid on Bury St Edmunds
RM2M99YAN–Liverpool engine by E Bury & Co for the Railway. Side elevation, line drawing.
RM2RGCCH6–F.A. CUP FINAL BURY 6 DERBY COUNTY 0 (played at Crystal Palace)
RMTWB299–WW1 - Aftermath of a Zeppelin Raid on Bury St Edmunds
RMG36N1X–The Iroquois people of North America bury their dead in a sitting posture. Date: 1846
RMG3CPTJ–FA Cup winners in 1900, Bury. Association Cup Winners Player's Cigarettes card set, c. 1930. Date: 1900
RM2M9BC4W–Caunce, Oldham Athletic goalkeeper, clears from Bury forward in Manchester Senior Cup semi-final just before WW2
RM2RGDPW3–The Abbey Gate, Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, England, is all that remans of the once great 11th - 12th century abbey. The gate was destroyed in 1327 and later rebuilt.
RM2RG99WW–Thingoe Hill, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk - The 'South' Boy's Football Team from The East Anglian School for Boys (founded in 1873), which became The Culford School (since 1935).
RM2RGC20G–Lady CHARLOTTE SUSAN MARIA BURY, daughter of the 6th duke of Argyll, wife (1) of Colonel John Campbell, (2) rev Edward Bury. Not just a pretty face, she wrote poetry and stuff.
RM2RGCA6J–Photograph of a scramble in the goalmouth during a Second Division match between Tottenham Hotspur and Bury, held at White Hart Lane, during the 1929-30 season. The game resulted in a two-all draw.
RM2RG8Y73–A delivery cart negotiates the ford at Bury Lane, Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire.
RM2C8771K–The Black Dog & Duck , Bury, Chichester, Pulborough, Sussex, England.
RM2RGDEMC–The home of ARTHUR YOUNG at Bradfield Hall, near Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk.
RMG36KA2–Robert I (1274 - 1329), King of Scotland With Sir James Douglas - Bruce asks him to bury his heart in the Holy Land
RM2M98517–Jacob requiring an oath from his son Joseph to bury him in Canaan - Thomas Bankes Bible, Genesis 47.31.
RMPXJ4JT–Saxons bury their dead wrapped in a shroud, not in a coffin but in a grave lined with stones Date: circa 600
RM2M3PDMX–Firemen on the ruins of houses destroyed at Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk by incendiary bombs dropped in an air raid in 1915. Date: 1915
RM2M3RXXT–Lady Judith Sydney Myee Wynn-Carrington who married Walter Egerton George Lucian Keppel, 9th Earl of Albemarle, Viscount Bury, to become the Viscountess Bury earlier that month. Date: 1909
RM2M99WME–Three Edwardian people in a veteran car -- Mr and Hon Mrs Wood, with Captain Hutchinson of the 21st Lancers, outside Hengrave Hall, near Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, September 1906.
RM2M3K0M2–Photograph of a scramble in the goalmouth during a Second Division match between Tottenham Hotspur and Bury, held at White Hart Lane, during the 1929-30 season. The game resulted in a two-all draw. Date: 1929
RMHH4FY3–Princesses Elizabeth (1926-) (later Queen Elizabeth II) and Margaret (1930-2002) playing in the sandpit at St. Paul's Walden Bury, Welyn, Herts - the residence of their grandparents Claude Bowes-Lyon, 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne and Cecilia Cave
RM2RGCE11–Princesses Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth II) (1926-) and Margaret (1930-2002), daughters of the Duke and Duchess of York playing in a sandpit at St. Paul's Walden Bury, Welwyn, Herts - the residence of their Grandparents the Earl and Countess of Strathmore.
RM2M3P7YB–Lieutenant Colonel and the Hon. Mrs Wood outside the wonderful porch of Hengrave Hall, near Bury St. Edmunds in Suffolk. The hall was converted into a complete hospital for wounded soldiers. As The Tatler says, 'Situated in one of the most beautiful parts of the country...Hengrave Hall lends itself admirably to the purpose of convalescence.' Date: 1914
RM2K64CJG–Vintage 19th century photograph - Street of Tombs, Pompeii, Italy. The Street of Tombs ran from the Herculaneum Gate on the road leading towards Herculaneum. It was forbidden to bury bodies inside the walls of Pompeii and so this street, which is outside of the city, has over thirty tombs in it. It was a busy road for travellers and so also had shops along it.
RM2M3K0M6–Derby County defender heading the ball clear, as Bury attack during the F.A. Cup Final, 18th April 1903. This match was played at the Crystal Palace stadium and resulted in Bury winning 6-0. Such a win was not entirely expected given that Derby had won their previous meeting, only 3 months beforehand, 2-0. 1903
RM2M3NTAA–The Football Association Cup Final at the Crystal Palace, where Bury beat Derby County by six goals to nil in the presence of over 63,000 spectators. Sketches here by Ernest Prater show an injured goal keeper being attended to, football supporters wearing their team colours and carrying umbrellas, Bury scoring a goal and travellers from the north who slept through the match. Date: April 25th 1903
RMPXGWMB–King and Queen of Spain and Party at Osborne House, Isle of Wight. Top row: Viscount Bury (Walter Keppel, 9th Earl of Albemarle) (1882-1979), Prince Arthur of Connaught (1883-1938), Lord Neville (?), Beatrice, Princess Henry of Battenberg (1857-1944), Colonel Lord William Cecil (1854-1943), Helena Augusta Victoria, Princess Christian of Schleswig-Holstein by marriage (18461923) and Miss Minnie Cochrane (?), daughter of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Thomas J. Cochrane. Middle Row: Princess Victoria of Schleswig-Holstein (1870-1948), King Alfonso XIII of Spain (1886-1941), Queen of Spain Victoria Eu
RM2M3JTER–Scene at Quaglino's restaurant in Bury Street from 1932 showing diners in evening dress, at tables, chatting or dancing. Originally established in 1929, Quaglino's was the most famous of London's 'society' restaurants. Date: 1932
RM2M3NTPN–"The Harvest" Caption: "And with mine own hand labour'd it to grow, and his as all the harvest that I reap'd" The moralising quote, from the Rubaiyat of Omar Kyyam, offers no sympathy to this dead German, lying symbolically in a field of wheat. The fate of the bodies of fallen soldiers was dependant on many factors: the stage of battle, the weather, the generosity of the enemy in allowing stretcher-bearers to bring back their dead. Where possible, soldiers tried to bury their fallen comrades with solemnity but in many cases bodies lay where they fell, until they wer
RMER5HPT–The Park, Bolton, Lancashire
RMER5HP4–Deane Church, Bolton, Lancashire
RMER5GA5–The Village, Hawkshaw, Lancashire
RMG3745F–THOMAS WALDEGRAVE
RMD86ACE–The burying of Hiram
RM2M3KA43–The Abbey Church, viewed from the gardens. 1860